Media Watchrss

After hours and hours of exhausting surfing, we have found these useful links for MercatorNet readers.

Let Americans learn Arabic

The New York Sun | 18 January 2007

How do you win hearts and minds when among 1,000 workers at the U.S. embassy in Iraq only six speak Arabic?

Letter from a Birmingham jail

The Atlantic | 18 January 2007

Martin Luther King writes from a narrow cell in 1963

Our inarticulate future

The American Spectator | 18 January 2007

The English language heads towards a medley of curses and grunts

Are wars really exacting a higher civilian death toll?

Human Security Centre | 18 January 2007

Here's the good news

Another perspective, or jihad TV?

New York Times | 18 January 2007

Father of murdered Daniel Pearl says don't ban Al Jazeera but it is a potential threat,

Roads, not birth control

All Africa | 17 January 2007

A Nigerian columnist lambastes the president for blaming the country's problems on overpopulation.

Pornography The real perversion

Townhall.com | 17 January 2007

Porn is now socially acceptable thanks to free speech advocates

Casual sex is a con

London Times | 17 January 2007

Former groupie Dawn Eden explains how she realised morality made more sense for women than free love.

Celebrating Martin Luther King Day

NRO | 16 January 2007

He was no friend of moral relativism.

Don’t forget your manners

New York Times | 15 January 2007

The latest crop of etiquette books for children are a mixed bag.

Lessons from an Archbishop’s fall

Newsweek | 13 January 2007

To take control of its own history, the Catholic Church in Poland needs to vet miles of communist-era police records.

What Thomas Jefferson learned from the Muslim Book

The U.S. Veteran Dispatch | 13 January 2007

Used by the first Muslim U.S. congressman for his swearing in, this Quran leads to pirate history

Against polygamy

David Warren online | 13 January 2007

Canada allows three parent families and polygamy is next.

The moral challenge of modern science

The New Atlantis | 13 January 2007

To be morally neutral when science's intentions and influence are not.

Are you the Person of the Year?

Spiked | 08 January 2007

Time magazine's hype about the Web 2.0 is underwhelming.

Secular fundamentalists are the new totalitarians

Guardian | 08 January 2007

Why should believers stay in the closet?

The story of a well-lived life

05 January 2007

Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, RIP

Purging the Classics From the Local Library

American Spectator | 05 January 2007

Where culture and cost meet, culture departs, bloodied and bowed.

Hope and hype

First Things | 03 January 2007

Excellent summary of current knowledge about embryonic stem cells

Sly moves

CNS | 02 January 2007

Sylvester Stallone revives his religion along with his acting career.

Malthus was wrong

Edge | 02 January 2007

Supporting 10 billion of us won't be a big problem, says the science editor of The Economist.

Christmas cheer from Darwin’s rottweiler

Australian | 31 December 2006

Behind the bilious facade is a bilious personality.

Revisiting Italian art history

Chiesa | 30 December 2006

A Yale art historian turned priest has written a spectacular history of Italian art.

Holland’s Post-Secular Future

Weekly Standard | 29 December 2006

Christianity is dead. Long live Christianity!

Team Hoyt

21 December 2006

A father and his spastic quadriplegic son compete in marathons and triathalons.

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